Named Entity Results, Lacedaemon (Greece)

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l'Antiquité, i.192,ff.; and Frazer, note on Paus.
7.25.10 （vol. iv. pp. 172ff.） And Zeus appointed him
herald to himself and to the infernal gods.
Taygete had by Zeus a son Lacedaemon, after whom
the country of Lacedaemon is called.Compare Paus. 3.1.2;
Scholiast on Eur. Or. 626.
Lacedaemon and
Sparta, daughter of Eurotas （ who was a son of
Lelex,According to Paus. 3.1.1, Eurotas was a son of Myles, who was a son of
Lelex. a sw Hippocoon had sons, to wit: Dorycleus, Scaeus, Enarophorus, Eutiches, Bucolus,
Lycaethus, Tebrus, Hippothous, Eurytus, Hippocorystes, Alcinus, and Alcon.
With the help of these sons Hippocoon expelled Icarius and Tyndareus from Lacedaemon.As to the
banishment of Tyndareus and his restoration by Herakles, see Diod. 4.33.5;
Paus. 2.18.7; Paus.
3.1.4ff.; Paus. 3.21.4; Scholiast on Eur. Or.
457; Scholiast on Hom. Il. ii.581. According to the Scholi

. See above, Apollod. 2.4.5; Apollod. 2.4.7.
When the war lingered on and he could not take Athens, he prayed to Zeus that he might be avenged on the Athenians. And the
city being visited with a famine and a pestilence, the Athenians at first, in obedience to
an ancient oracle, slaughtered the daughters of Hyacinth, to wit, Antheis, Aegleis,
Lytaea, and Orthaea, on the grave of Geraestus, the
Cyclops; now Hyacinth, the father of the damsels, had come from Lacedaemon and dwelt in Athens.Compare Diod.
17.15.2; Hyginus, Fab. 238 （who seems to mention only one
daughter; but the passage is corrupt）; Harpocration, s.v. *(uakinqi/des, who says that the daughters of Hyacinth
the Lacedaemonian were known as the Hyacinthides. The name of one of the daughters of
Hyacinth is said to have been Lusia （Stephanus Byzantius, s.v. *lousi/a）. Some people, however, identified
the Hyacinthides with the daughters of Erechtheus, who

married
Penelope. And Circe sent them both away to the Islands of the Blest.
But some say that Penelope was seduced by Antinous and sent away by
Ulysses to her father Icarius, and that when she came to
Mantinea in Arcadia she bore Pan to Hermes.A high mound
of earth was shown as the grave of Penelope at Mantinea in Arcadia. According to the Mantinean story, Ulysses had found
her unfaithful and banished her the house; so she went first to her native Sparta, and afterwards to Mantinea, where she died and was buried. See Paus. 8.12.5ff. The tradition that Penelope was the mother of
Pan by Hermes （Mercury） is mentioned by Cicero, De natura deorum
iii.22.56. According to Duris, the Samian, Penelope was the mother of Pan by
all the suitors （Tzetzes, Scholiast on Lycophron 772）.
The same story is mentioned also by Serv. Verg. A. 2.44,
who says that Penelope was supposed to have given birth to Pan during her

ether all the noblest men of
Greece, and promised that to him who should
kill the beast he would give the skin as a prize. Now the men who assembled to hunt the
boar were theseFor lists of the heroes who hunted the
Calydonian boar, see Ov. Met. 8.299ff.; Hyginus,
Fab. 173.:— Meleager, son of Oeneus; Dryas, son of Ares; these
came from Calydon; Idas and Lynceus, sons of Aphareus, from Messene; Castor and Pollux, sons of Zeus and Leda,
from Lacedaemon; Theseus, son of Aegeus, from
Athens; Admetus, son of Pheres, from Pherae;
Ancaeus and Cepheus, sons of Lycurgus, from Arcadia; Jason, son of Aeson, from Iolcus; Iphicles, son of Amphitryon, from
Thebes; Pirithous, son of Ixion, from
Larissa; Peleus, son of Aeacus, from Phthia;
Telamon, son of Aeacus, from Salamis; Eurytion,
son of Actor, from Phthia; Atalanta, daughter
of Schoeneus, from Arcadia; Amphiaraus, son of
Oicles, from Argos

oth by land and sea, and slew Tisamenus, son of Orestes.Pausanias gives a different account of the death of Tisamenus. He says that,
being expelled from Lacedaemon and Argos by the returning Heraclids, king Tisamenus led
an army to Achaia and there fell in a battle
with the Ionians, who then inhabited that se, they set up three altars of Paternal Zeus, and sacrificed upon
them, and cast lots for the cities. So the first drawing was for Argos, the second for Lacedaemon, and the third for Messene. And they brought a pitcher of water, and resolved that each should
cast in a lot. Now Temenus and the two sons of Aristodemusj. 1285）.
And on the altars on which they sacrificed they found
signs lying: for they who got Argos by the lot
found a toad; those who got Lacedaemon found a
serpent; and those who got Messene found a
fox.In the famous paintings by Polygnotus at Delphi, the painter depicted Menelaus, king of